Skip to main content

Safety Centre of Excellence accolade for TRF

As the world joins hands to make 2011-2020 the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety, the Transport Research Foundation (TRF), the parent of TRL, has been selected as a new Centre of Excellence. It was appointed by iRAP (the International Roads Assessment Programme), a UK charity that co-chairs the work on infrastructure for the UN Decade of Action, and which has established a new way to inspect and measure the safety of roads. It recommends high priority improvements which will save the most lives for the m
May 10, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
As the world joins hands to make 2011-2020 the 3447 UN 3439 Decade of Action for Road Safety, the Transport Research Foundation (TRF), the parent of 777 TRL, has been selected as a new Centre of Excellence.

It was appointed by iRAP (the International Roads Assessment Programme), a UK charity that co-chairs the work on infrastructure for the UN Decade of Action, and which has established a new way to inspect and measure the safety of roads. It recommends high priority improvements which will save the most lives for the money available.

Chairman of iRAP, John Dawson, said: “The TRF enables world-class research on transport and safety problems not least in low and middle income countries.”

Signing the agreement at the UK launch of the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety, Susan Sharland, chief cxecutive TRF, said: “This agreement will enable cooperation and collaboration for road safety. We support the Decade of Action and fully endorse iRAP’s vision of a world free of high risk roads. In the last decade our research has helped build the measurements of safety that iRAP uses. Now we look forward to helping new countries, particularly in the Middle East and Africa, develop programmes, as well as continuing to help with research.”

During the Decade of Action 2011-2020 iRAP has set out its goal to help inspect some 3.5 million kilometres of the world’s busiest roads where most road deaths are concentrated and develop investment plans that countries can afford to save a million deaths and serious injuries. Simple engineering measures such as footpaths, crossings, road markings, road shoulder treatments and safety fencing typically top the list of iRAP recommendations.

• See also Safety Measures this issue of Eurofile.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Safer Roads by Design comes to Costa Rica
    November 14, 2012
    IRF’s itinerant cycle of training seminars aimed at helping countries eliminate needless deaths and meet their commitments to the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety made a notable stop in San Jose, Costa Rica on September 12-14. Safer Roads by Design - Costa Rica was hosted by the National Laboratory of Materials and Structural Models of the University of Costa Rica (Lanamme UCR), the country’s leading knowledge centre on road engineering, with additional support from the Inter-American Development Bank an
  • Joint action on Europe's road safety
    February 28, 2012
    A new report says that the vehicle industry and the highways sector should work closely in a bid to save lives on the road.
  • The GRSF: breaking down barriers
    December 17, 2020
    Improving road safety can be expensive, especially for low- to middle-income countries. The Global Road Safety Facility has been working hard to alleviate the situation
  • iRAP creates Safer Journeys Lead for Africa
    December 13, 2022
    For the new role, the International Road Assessment Programme (iRAP), based in London, is looking for a person with a passion for safe mobility and a strong awareness of road infrastructure safety technical issues in Africa.